Polysemy in the Attic Black-figure Vase-painting Tradition

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dc.contributor.author Mackay, Elizabeth Anne
dc.contributor.editor Lang-Auinger, Claudia
dc.contributor.editor Trinkl, Elisabeth
dc.date.accessioned 2021-11-03T22:30:16Z
dc.date.available 2021-11-03T22:30:16Z
dc.date.issued 2021
dc.identifier.isbn 9783700184638
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/2292/57224
dc.description.abstract This paper will argue that polysemy is an essential and pervasive characteristic of the Attic black-figure vase-painting tradition. As is now well recognised in scholarship, the sharp distinction between daily life and mythology is largely a modern construct. It is therefore unlikely to have been an issue for the painters and their contemporaries, whose semiotic register encompassed a seamless continuum from myth through cult activity to lived experience. The images on vases that are often classed as ambiguous or even indeterminable in the scholarship should therefore rather be analysed according to the principle that they could – and did – present themselves as the basis for diverse, and even contrastive, significations that were all simultaneously evoked by the image in its context within the tradition: this is not to imply alternative interpretations (which would constitute ambiguity), but rather, the images are polysemic, whereby the multiple meanings were simultaneously (re-)constructed and understood as conjointly expressing the ancient perception of a world in which the natural was perfused with the supernatural and entirely consonant with it. This concept is challenging to demonstrate, because it requires us to access a receptive and perceptive system that is alien to our tendency to expect an image from another culture to be a constant signifier with a relatively fixed and limited range of meaning: comparable is the notorious difficulty of translating a double entendre from one language to another (the double entendre is in fact often advanced to exemplify polysemy, where again the meaning arises precisely from the simultaneous recognition of two different significations from different registers). Nevertheless, there are some sets of examples in black-figure where the polysemic character can be demonstrated persuasively. The head cups of the second half of the sixth century are one such group, where the varying inscriptions on some vessels point clearly towards a polysemic character for all. A diverse selection of other types of black-figure depiction will be incorporated to indicate that polysemy is a widely applicable phenomenon in the black-figure tradition (and indeed it seems to have been generally inherent in the imagery of early Greece).
dc.publisher Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften
dc.relation.ispartof Griechische Vasen als Medium für Kommunikation. Corpus Vasorum Antiquorum Österreich Beiheft 3
dc.rights Items in ResearchSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated. Previously published items are made available in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher.
dc.rights.uri https://researchspace.auckland.ac.nz/docs/uoa-docs/rights.htm
dc.title Polysemy in the Attic Black-figure Vase-painting Tradition
dc.type Book Item
pubs.begin-page 79
dc.date.updated 2021-10-12T21:49:45Z
dc.rights.holder Copyright: The author en
pubs.author-url http://austriaca.at/8463-8inhalt?frames=yes
pubs.edition 1
pubs.end-page 88
pubs.place-of-publication Vienna (Wien)
dc.rights.accessrights http://purl.org/eprint/accessRights/RestrictedAccess en
pubs.elements-id 869668


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